- Joined
- Mar 29, 2007
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- 4,838 (0.75/day)
System Name | Aquarium |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 9 7950x |
Motherboard | ROG Strix X670-E |
Cooling | Lian Li Galahead 360 AIO |
Memory | 2x16gb Flare X5 Series 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR5-6000 PC5-48000 |
Video Card(s) | Asus RTX 3060 |
Storage | 2TB WD SN850X Black NVMe, 500GB Samsung 970 NVMe |
Display(s) | Gigabyte 32" IPS 144Hz |
Case | Hyte Y60 |
Power Supply | Corsair RMx 850 |
Software | Win 11 Pro/ PopOS! |
Core i7 = glorified Pentium 4/D
If you recall, Pentium 4/D handed it to Athlon 64/X2 in media/encoding but the Athlon 64/X2 handed it to the Pentium 4/D in the gaming department. History repeats except Core i7 isn't as weak in gaming as Pentium 4/D were.
Core i7 is faster because it has many more stages which go through media work much faster. Longer stages aren't good for games though because it takes longer to recycle those stages.
Not so much, this isn't netburst. It has hyperthreading, but that doesn't make it a glorified netburst chip. Different architectures. Different computing world than it was in those days too w/ more uses at hand, and gaming in those days was more cpu reliant than it is today. It isn't weak, it's just a non-factor.